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Putting Money Away For A Year

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islasmum | 15:19 Sat 17th Aug 2013 | Business & Finance
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If I had a £1000 to put away for one year, what would give me most return on it?
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The favourite in the 2:30 at Kempton. :-)
Britannia BS 2.03%
ZM.....LOL

I agree with Zac.......
Not on the ones I backed today
If you pay tax, the interest on £1000 at 2.03% is £23.

If you aren't desperate for £23 you might as well try your luck on the premium bonds. The worst that can happen is you win nothing and get back your £1000.
You may be a big winner.
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OK, so if I rule out betting and gambling........?
Maximum return of about £20 and that would have to be taxed.
Not worth it....spend it.
Buy Premium Bonds. You have a chance of winning £25.00 to £1,000,000 every month. They are totally protected, you can get them back in about a week if you need the money in an emergency.
I did give a sensible answer which I found on Money Saving Expert website.
I'm not sure where the figures are from HC- isn't it £20.30 before tax so can't be £23 after tax. The tax can be 20% if you are a taxpayer. There may be a 10p band too for savings. Or no tax if you declare you are a non tax payer or find an ISA at this rate
You're right, factor. Not worth putting in to a savings account at the current rates.

If you open a Nationwide Flex account you will get 5% interest for one year - a much better return.

http://www.nationwide.co.uk/current_account/flexdirect/default.htm?intcmp=Intcmp_1949
If the government backed premium bonds can give out large prizes, from where do they get the prize-money; with interest rates virtually non-existent, is it run at a loss, or is it a sort of Ponzi scheme?
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Sorry Zac, I did read your answer - I was browsing yesterday and I found that building societies and banks seemed to be offering around 2.03%, which doesn't seem quite what I was looking for - Premium Bonds are a good idea, I think that I may actually have a Premium Bond somewhere, but absolutely clueless to where it may be now! What about gold?
I think the prizes are only around 1-2% of the fund so it doesn't cost the government much -it's cheaper than borrowing in other ways.
The large prizes are only a per centage of the savings. Base rate in the UK may be 0.5% but there are still big earnings to be made with investments, especially if you have a lot of money to invest.

The prize fund has recently been cut because of the poor interest rates
Gold may have reached its price peak and there's also the buyers premium to consider. I don't think it's a good investment now.
Gold prices are at an all time high so it is a very poor investment.
You are supposed to buy when the price is low and sell when it's high.
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Must learn to type faster! Thanks ff, hc and Kandro - what is a Ponzi system?
f.f.; If everyone cashed in their bonds could they be re-paid without a bail-out?
It's a confidence trick operated by crooks. They offer fantastic returns on your investment and use other investors money to pay the earlier investors. By its nature it's bound to collapse leaving a lot of people out of pocket.
It would be a problem for the government I think. But if a bailout was needed who would pay it!

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